Posts Tagged ‘cookies’

If you’ve ever seen those impressively pretty plates of
Scandanavian cookies and wanted to learn to make your own, now’s
your chance.Oslo Lodge, Sons of Norway in Bremerton will host
three, free cookie baking workshops.I heard about it somewhat late
(in today’s paper), so the first one, in which the group baked
Spritz cookies beginning at 9 a.m. today will probably be tough to
make in time (about 15 minutes as of this posting).

The next two, however, are coming Sept. 26 and Oct. 3, also
starting at 9.

Here’s the really simple recipe for the peanut butter cookies I
briefly fretted over last night. I believe I got it out of a
Weight Watchers magazine, but I’ve been making them by heart, so
the proportions may be off from the original.

This weekend was cooking madness at my house. I cooked up
goodies for a party on Saturday and a cookie exchange on
Sunday.

Knowing that I’d be having people over and a cookie exchange the
next day, I set out making a ton of cookies. In planning, I wanted
to do at least a couple little fancy cookies and some things that
were far simpler. So when I started baking Friday night, it was
with a recipe I knew I could make a lot of, and I wanted it to be
fairly simple and freezable so 1) I could make extra and freeze
them to put in Christmas cookie plates for other friends and 2)
just in case no one ate them.

So I hit up the basic chocolate chip cookie recipe, but decided
to liven it up a bit for the holidays. I took a basic cookie recipe
and swapped out the semi-sweet chips with white chocolate chips,
added pecans and dried cherries.

They turned out OK, but I realized after the fact (always after
the fact) that I should have bought more pecans to really bulk up
the cookie (which I accounted for in the recipe below) and
shouldn’t have tried to make the batch all at once.

My new cooking lesson is that the baking soda reaction is only
good for so long. It apparently starts reacting soon after it mixes
with the other wet ingredients, and if you wait too long, like when
you’re baking 7 dozen cookies, the cookies get kind of flat and
crispy.

What these cookies did do right, however, was jazz up a basic
recipe in a way that made it a little different from the norm. I’d
love to hear some of your suggestions for ways to make a basic
recipe better.

In a separate bowl, cream butter and sugars with a mixer. Add
eggs and vanilla, and beat until well-mised. Gradually beat in as
much of the dry mix as you can, and stir the rest until
well-combined. Fold in cherries, pecans and chips.

Drop by spoonfulls onto nonstick cookie sheets or sheets lined
with parchment paper. Bake a dozen at a time for 10-12
minutes. Cool on sheet for two minutes and finish cooling
completely on wire racks.